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ALERT: TYPHOON WARNING: Rota — Warning issued April 13 at 3:24PM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: TROPICAL STORM WARNING: Guam — Warning issued April 13 at 3:24PM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Alcona, MI — Warning issued April 13 at 3:28AM EDT until April 13 at 3:30PM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Taylor — Watch issued April 13 at 2:23AM CDT until April 14 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS La Crosse WIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Northern Marinette County — Watch issued April 13 at 2:04AM CDT until April 14 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Green Bay WIALERT: COASTAL FLOOD WARNING: Guam — Warning issued April 13 at 3:54PM ChST until April 16 at 5:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026ALERT: TYPHOON WARNING: Rota — Warning issued April 13 at 3:24PM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: TROPICAL STORM WARNING: Guam — Warning issued April 13 at 3:24PM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Alcona, MI — Warning issued April 13 at 3:28AM EDT until April 13 at 3:30PM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Taylor — Watch issued April 13 at 2:23AM CDT until April 14 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS La Crosse WIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Northern Marinette County — Watch issued April 13 at 2:04AM CDT until April 14 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Green Bay WIALERT: COASTAL FLOOD WARNING: Guam — Warning issued April 13 at 3:54PM ChST until April 16 at 5:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026

EPA's Chrysotile Asbestos Ban Takes Effect — What Restoration Contractors Need to Know

The EPA's ban on chrysotile asbestos, the last form of asbestos still in commercial use in the United States, took effect in March 2026. Restoration contractors working in older buildings must understand new compliance requirements.

EPA's Chrysotile Asbestos Ban Takes Effect — What Restoration Contractors Need to Know
Photo: EPA

WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency's ban on chrysotile asbestos — the last form of asbestos still in commercial use in the United States — took effect in March 2026, completing a regulatory process that began with the Toxic Substances Control Act reforms of 2016.

Chrysotile asbestos had continued to be used in a small number of industrial applications, including chlor-alkali plants, after earlier EPA bans were overturned by courts in the 1990s. The new ban, which survived legal challenges, prohibits the manufacture, processing, and distribution of chrysotile asbestos for any purpose.

For restoration contractors, the ban's most significant practical implication is the prohibition on using chrysotile-containing replacement parts or materials when repairing or restoring older buildings. Contractors must use asbestos-free alternatives, even when replacing like-for-like components in structures that originally contained asbestos.

The ban does not change the requirements for handling existing asbestos-containing materials in older buildings, which remain governed by EPA's National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants and OSHA's asbestos standard. Contractors must still follow established protocols for asbestos abatement and disposal.

The EPA has published compliance guidance for contractors working in older buildings, available on the agency's website. Restoration contractors who are uncertain about whether materials in a structure contain asbestos should have them tested by a certified asbestos inspector before beginning any work that could disturb the materials.

Sources & Citations
Topics:asbestos banEPAchrysotileTSCAcontractor compliance
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RNN is the national authority for disaster restoration industry news. Our editorial team covers storm, mold, fire, water, insurance, policy, and health topics for consumers, contractors, and legislators. Have a tip? Email [email protected]

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